Report Urges Dissolution of Scientology Church in France

Europe: Panel calls group a danger to the public and a threat to national
security.

Los Angeles Times, February 29, 2000
By John-Thor Dahlburg

PARIS--Scientology, the Los Angeles-based religion treated with
suspicion and hostility by several Western European governments, is now
under siege in France, where an official report has called for disbanding
church operations here.

A blue-ribbon government panel studying what French officials define as
"sects" has concluded that the faith, founded by the late U.S. science
fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, is a "vast enterprise of transnational
character" with its own private police force run clandestinely from the
United States.

"They have a clear strategy of infiltrating and of trying to influence
the state, and the will to do it," said Denis Barthelemy, a career
magistrate serving as secretary-general of the panel, the Interministerial
Mission on Combating Sects. "This goes beyond being an ordinary pressure
group. For the internal security of the state, we are afraid."

Panel Also Targets Cult Tied to Suicides

In the report to Prime Minister Lionel Jospin published this month, the
panel contends that Scientology is, in fact, a moneymaking venture. The
report goes to the extraordinary length of proposing the dissolution here of
Scientology and another religious group, the Order of the Solar Temple,
which lost 74 members to murder-suicides in France, Switzerland and Canada
between 1994 and 1997.

It is the latest controversy to embroil Scientology in Europe, where
the actions of courts and governments threaten to put some countries on a
collision course with the Clinton administration. A 1998 U.S. law makes
ensuring freedom of religion a priority in foreign policy, and the State
Department's worldwide survey of human rights practices released Friday
criticized some French conduct.

Tax claims brought against some Scientology churches in France in
1994-95 forced them into bankruptcy, the State Department said. The survey
also found that the classification of Scientology and 172 other groups as
sects by a French parliamentary committee four years ago contributed to "an
atmosphere of intolerance and bias against minority religions."

"We are in a climate of terror and witch hunts," said Daniele Gounord,
spokeswoman for the Paris Church of Scientology. She noted that the panel's
report is short on specifics to buttress its charges and said Scientologists
were never asked to give their side of the story.

"France is dealing with us the exact same way the Chinese deal with the
Falun Gong," she said, referring to a religious movement banned by leaders
in Beijing.

However, in the view of the government panel--which was chaired by
Alain Vivien, a former member of Parliament--Scientology constitutes a clear
and present danger to "public order" and the "dignity of the human person."

Some former Scientologists agree. "I was turned into a robot," said
Mona Vasquez, a 40-year-old Frenchwoman who spent seven years in the
organization. "They made me leave my studies, my boyfriend, my family."

France is far from the only European country where Scientology, which
was founded in 1954 and claims 8 million members worldwide, faces official
pressure. In Belgium, police in October raided the local church headquarters
and 24 other locations, including affiliated businesses. Thousands of
documents were carted away in that country's largest investigation of
Scientology's operations to date.

In Germany, where the government has denounced Scientology's
"totalitarian structure and methods" as a threat to democracy, church
activities are being probed by the Office for the Protection of the
Constitution. In the southern state of Bavaria, applicants for civil service
jobs are required to disclose any ties to Scientology. According to the
German Embassy in Washington, no applications have been rejected on those
grounds so far.

"What's happening in Europe is that more and more countries are
expressing concern about the proliferation of groups commonly known as cults
and doing more to protect their citizens," said Ian Haworth,
secretary-general of the South London-based Cult Information Center. Among
critics of controversial religions, Haworth said, there is broad consensus
that Scientology is the "worst group, the most sinister."

In June, the parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe, an
organization of 41 countries that promotes European cooperation, recommended
formation of a continentwide agency to watch over fringe "religious,
esoteric or spiritual groups" and facilitate the exchange of information.

In December, the French Senate--with Scientology as one of the
potential targets in mind--unanimously approved a bill that would empower
the government to dissolve religious sects if they disturb public order or
present a "major peril" for their members. The lower house of Parliament is
expected to examine similar legislation.

Paris Mayor Jean Tiberi has called for a ban on recruitment efforts by
sects near schools, retirement homes, drug-treatment centers and other
locales where, he said, society's "most vulnerable elements" are targeted.

French 'Are Putting a Religion on Trial'

French officials "are putting a religion on trial," charged Bill Walsh,
a Washington attorney who represents the Church of Scientology
International. "They are saying Scientology is a criminal enterprise and
should be banned and shut down."

French authorities, however, maintain that they are not attacking
religious beliefs, which are protected by law, but illegal conduct. In
November, a Marseilles court found five current or former members of the
church guilty of swindling. In 1996, a Lyons court found the former local
Scientology director guilty of swindling and involuntary manslaughter in the
death of a man who committed suicide after his wife was pressured by the
church official to take out a loan to finance $6,000 of church teachings for
him.

France also appears to be the only country to have convicted the
creator of Scientology of a criminal offense. In 1978, Hubbard was found
guilty in absentia of swindling and sentenced to four years in prison. The
author, who never came to France, died in 1986.

Leaders of France's Scientologists indignantly deny the charges against
them. They plan to issue a detailed rebuttal.

"These are total hate campaigns," Gounord said. "We are people who obey
the law."

According to the spokeswoman, the organization's members in France--she
put their number at 50,000--are subject to increasing official harassment,
including tax audits, the closing of their schools and police pressure on
other French not to do business with them.

French officials reject accusations of harassment. Like some of those
who have left Scientology, they paint an unsavory picture of a
globe-girdling organization obsessed with making money that uses blackmail,
harassment and smear campaigns to keep former members or opponents in line.

According to the French officials and former Scientologists, tight
control is exercised from the mother church, located on a Hollywood street
renamed in 1996 to honor Hubbard, and from a command center at Gilman Hot
Springs in Riverside County.

"All directives, everything we did, was ordered by missionaries from
the United States," said Vasquez, the former member. "Every Thursday, we
collected the money from all over Europe and sent it to the United States.
Copenhagen [site of Scientology's European headquarters] obeyed; everything
they did was decided by the Americans."

Barthelemy, the government panel's secretary-general, said former
Scientologists have told French authorities that information collected by
the church, including potentially embarrassing or compromising data gleaned
from questionnaires and interviews with members, is forwarded to the U.S.

Local Annual Revenue Said to Be $9.2 Million

In June, a French parliamentary commission investigating the finances
of religious groups classified here as sects estimated Scientology's annual
revenue in France at more than $9.2 million, and worldwide at between $1.5
billion and $3 billion.

Gounord, Scientology's Paris spokeswoman, said the only connection the
churches in France have with Los Angeles is the training of pastors and
auditors, who carry out question-and-answer counseling sessions the church
calls auditing.

The French report makes special mention of Scientology's Office of
Special Affairs, which it labels a private police. Stacy Brooks, a former
member now working with an anti-Scientology organization in Clearwater,
Fla., described the OSA as a dirty-tricks squad that targets the church's
critics.

"I know all about these people," Brooks said. "They tried to smear and
harass me and my husband after I left in 1989."

Karin Pouw, spokeswoman for the Church of Scientology International,
called Brooks a "liar for hire." Pouw, a member of the OSA, said the office
functions as a "public affairs office."

Faced with the mounting pressure in France, Scientologists said they
will call on other countries, including the U.S., and international bodies
for help. On Thursday, they plan to hold an international conference in
Paris to examine limits placed on religious freedom here.

Gounord said the court cases and official criticism have only increased
the French members' determination. "We always win," she said. "In
Scientology, we believe in what we are doing."

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